Example sentences of "[noun] of [verb] into the " in BNC.
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1 | There are provisions enabling investors to recover loss they have suffered as a result of entering into the share transactions . |
2 | Even though equity together with rescission gives an indemnity , this is limited in scope to cover only expenditure necessarily incurred as a result of entering into the contract ( Whittington v Seale-Hayne ( 1900 ) 82 LT 49 ) . |
3 | However , in 1969 , a large-scale American project , JOIDES ( Joint Oceanographic Institutions Deep Earth Sampling ) was able to confirm it , in the course of a programme of drilling into the deep ocean floors to sample the rocks and sediments there . |
4 | She warns against what can sometimes be a knee-jerk support of abortion technology for fear of playing into the hands of the right wing . |
5 | But again I held myself warily at a certain distance , not daring to make contact with him for fear of falling into the kind of trap Dana had prepared for me . |
6 | I can assure you that I have no intention of straying into the question of the location of the headquarters of Caledonian MacBrayne . |
7 | The balls of course would not stay put , and followed their pirouetting owners down to the front of the stage , with every intention of dropping into the auditorium . |
8 | But it was starting to worry her that he could so openly refer to her running away from him , and since she had no intention of going into the ‘ whys ’ and ‘ wherefores ’ of that , and since she had made her apology for deceiving him — and had got off rather lightly , she had to admit — Fabia got to her feet . |
9 | ‘ I 've no intention of coming into the palazzo at this time of night . ’ |
10 | I might have checked out the financial aspects of buying into the station , but one thing I 've learned over the years is that you can never do too much research . |
11 | The Aleutian trench is thus where it hits the North American Plate ; the trenches of Kurlin , Japan , Bonin , Mariana ( the deepest in the world , with a hole of 36,201 feet ) , Yap , Palau and Manus indicate its collision with the Eurasian Plate ; the Mussau , Solomon , Vitiaz , Torres and New Hebrides trenches show where the Pacific Plate overrides the subducted Indo-Australian Plate ; and the Tonga , Kermadec , Hikurangi , Hjort , Iselin and Balleny trenches demonstrate the effect of bumping into the same Indo — Australian Plate and passing beneath it . |
12 | Incidentally re : all this talk of getting into the programme and that — if we go ‘ overground ’ you can kiss goodbye to references to Man U as pigs , scum etc or any abuse of opposition anywhere . |
13 | It would also have the advantage of linking into the proposed L.R.T. system at the Ice Bowl , and could , therefore , serve the dual purpose as a tourist facility , and a peak-time commuter line for the people of Comber . |
14 | It was Lucy 's hope of getting into the outer office unchallenged . |
15 | She 'd made the move to Hollywood with her Dutch artist husband Luc Leestemaker in the hope of breaking into the movie big-time . |
16 | This means that in order to paddle a straight line in a white water boat we need to include a bit of steering into the forward stroke . |
17 | ‘ But he just kind of strolled into the office and said ‘ Well … |
18 | I I ca n't comment on on comments that you are referencing , however I will say that in Maryland er we displaced an incumbent vendor who had been there a long time , er that vendor was a bit upset as you might imagine with being displaced as a vendor , and in Maryland we had a situation that kind of evolved into the same kind of political row you would expect when a company loses a long time business . |
19 | His head was at a strange angle because of the way that he 'd kind of subsided into the corner , and his eyes were slightly open . |
20 | If they overcome these guards , and manage to break into the cages , the adventurers still have the difficulty of getting into the chests . |
21 | Minor jealousies and misunderstandings can fan the petty flames of bickering into the roaring fires of hatred . ’ |
22 | The ropes took the first opportunity of falling into the waterfall and freezing solid , bending at unpredictable angles , more or less imitating wire hawser . |
23 | The demonstrators ' tactic of walking into the police lines , while it was a principled assertion of their right to march , invited the violent response that followed and made further violence much more likely . |
24 | Dittmar , incredibly , tried a backhand volley return of serve into the side-wall nick . |
25 | Isabel paused in the act of stepping into the worn garment and met her maid 's worried brown eyes . |
26 | Only once or twice has he taunted me with what sounds like the interesting sport of going into the gents in the Cauldhame Arms ( or anywhere else , I suppose ) and attacking the drowned fag-ends in the urinals with a stream of piss . |
27 | But it it 's sort of built into the ground apparently so that it 'd be pretty low down . |
28 | It 's interesting though , that after all this aggravation , the fact that er the Prime Minister nearly lost his job , er there was nearly another election erm there 's going to be no celebrations , no fireworks , no balloons , no huge dinners on Monday we 're just going to sort of peter into the Maastricht treaty coming into effect . |
29 | One does n't want them to sort of follow it blindly , of course , one wants them to discuss it carefully , very carefully , but it has to sort of fit into the ongoing life of the institution and not be a kind of little game that someone is playing on their own somewhere because they happen to be linked with the university or doing a degree or something . |
30 | " I have n't seen her for several weeks then she came in about two hours ago — sort of staggered into the kitchen , and she was carrying the kitten in her mouth . |